46 Wash. 207 | Wash. | 1907
Action for personal injuries. On a trial of this case in the court below, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff appeals.
The defendant’s evidence and contention was to the effect that the boy was just in front of the car and very close to it when he fell, and that he fell immediately against and under the car; that the car was running at no greater speed than three miles per hour, and was immediately stopped within seven feet after the boy fell. In view of the findings of the jury and the evidence, we think this was the fact of the case. The negligence alleged was that the defendant maintained these cross-over tracks so that the rails were about two inches above the planking of the bridge, and also that the motorman ran his car seventy-five feet and upon the boy while he was prostrate upon the track in plain view. These allegations of the answer were denied, and the evidence was in direct conflict upon them.
Appellant’s first assignment • is that the court erred in giving the jury the following instruction:
“At the time the accident occurred both plaintiff and defendant, in common with the public generally, had an equal right to the safe and reasonable use of the highway where the accident occurred, with this difference that the defendant, being confined by the nature of its occupancy to these tracks, had the preference and superior right to the reasonable use of such tracks at the time and place of the accident, and consequently it was plaintiff’s duty to avoid being on the track or so close to it as to be in danger from the moving car.”
,It is claimed that the last part of this instruction, beginning with the words “and consequently,” is erroneous, because it in effect tells the jury that the boy had no right upon the track, although he had been thrown there by his bicycle
In the last-cited case substantially this same instruction was approved. See page 243, instruction numbered 14. The court, of course, did not mean, and did not tell the jury, that if the bóy was lying prostrate upon the track the car could be run over him; and this is made plain in a subsequent instruction, to the effect that it was the duty of the motorman in charge of the car to keep constant lookout in front of hiin to see that there were no persons in a position to be injured by the car; and if the plaintiff was thrown prostrate upon the track in front of the car, it was the duty of the motorman to use his emergency appliances in order to stop the car most quickly.
The appellant next argues that the court erred in refusing to give his requested instruction numbered 3, as follows:
“The jury are instructed that, even though they may find the plaintiff guilty of negligence in attempting to ride his bicycle across the cross-track under the circumstances, yet if they find that the motorman operating the car that caused the injury saw the peril in which the plaintiff was placed in time to have stopped the car by the use of ordinary care and diligence before it ran upon the plaintiff, and he failed to do so, then the defendant is liable to the plaintiff for the injury received by him.”
And refusing to give No. 10, which is in substance the same as the one just quoted, except it uses the words, “If . the .... motorman by the use of reasonable care and
“If you find by a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff himself was negligent, and that this negligence was ihe proximate cause of the injury, then he cannot recover, unless the defendant, having knowledge of the plaintiff’s negligence, could by the use of ordinary care have prevented the injury, . . . and the plaintiff could not recover unless, as I have already said, the defendant knew or should have known of plaintiff’s negligence, and could by the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care have prevented the injury.”
These instructions fully covered the requested instructions, which is all that is required.
Several other errors are alleged for refusal to give requested instructions, but we find that all of them were given in substance. We do not deem them of sufficient importance to justify us in setting them out here. It is sufficient to say that the instructions given by the court fully and fairly cover the law of the case in all its aspects.
Appellant also complains because the court denied the motion for a new trial, made upon the ground of insufficiency of the evidence. We are satisfied the court did not err in this respect. If the appellant’s contentions were true, that he fell from his bicycle upon the railway track seventy-five feet in front of a slowly approaching car, and that there was nothing to obstruct the view of the motorman while the boy was there prostrate and unable to get out of the way of the car, and it was carelessly and negligently run upon him and injured him, he was certainly entitled to recover, and the court so told the jury. On the other hand, if the facts claimed by respondent were true, that the cross-over tracks were only flush with the floor of the bridge, and reasonably safe for ordinary travel, and if the boy rode near the moving car and fell against it or immediately in front of it, and the emergency brake was used immediately upon the motorman’s .seeing the boy fall, and the car was stopped within seven feet,
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Hadlby, C. J., Dunbar, Crow, and Fullerton, JJ:, concur.